Today Is Lei Day — Everything to Know About the Hawaiian Day of Celebration
And why you should never throw one away.
Getty Images
In Hawaiian culture, the lei symbolizes celebration, friendship, and the true meaning of the aloha spirit — and there’s no greater feeling than being greeted with one upon arrival to the islands.
“A lei is an expression of love and can be given on any occasion, not just a special occasion,” Monte McComber, Culture Director at Royal Hawaiian Center, told Travel + Leisure, noting that wearing lei in Hawaii is common practice and not just for tourists — in fact, there is a celebration of it every May 1, known as Lei Day.
The holiday began in 1927 when poet Don Blanding declared there should be a holiday celebrating the act of giving and receiving a lei, according to Honolulu’s government site. Blanding shared his idea with his Honolulu Star Bulletin co-worker, Grace Tower Warren, who decided the holiday should be celebrated on May Day and coined the phrase “May Day is Lei Day.”
In 1928, the inaugural Lei Day was celebrated in downtown Honolulu, and the following year it was proclaimed that “May Day is Lei Day in Hawaii” on May 1 by then-Governor Wallace R. Farrington.
“It is one of the biggest cultural celebrations of the year and one of my personal favorites to celebrate and share with visitors,” Tuivaioge said.
Although it’s not a state holiday, festivities include school celebrations for kids, a May Day lei court — complete with a king and queen — where each of the islands are represented by a princess and prince, music, hula, food, and, of course, plenty of fresh lei to showcase and share.
“The tradition here in the Islands on May 1st is to make a lei, wear a lei, and give a lei,” McComber shared.
This year, the largest Lei Day celebration is held on Oahu and this year’s 96th Annual Lei Day event will be held on Wednesday at Kapiolani Park in Honolulu.
skodonnell/Getty Images
But whether its Lei Day or any other day, part of what makes receiving a lei so special starts long before it’s placed around your neck.
Wendy Tuivaioge, native Hawaiian and director of Hawaiian Programs at Four Seasons Resort Maui at Wailea, told Travel + Leisure that receiving a lei embodies important cultural values, including: aloha (love), hō’ihi (respect), ho’ohanohano (to honor), and ho’olaulea (celebration).
“To give or receive a lei is all of these things,” Tuivaioge, known as Aunty Wendy, said. “The accessibility is part of what makes the custom so beautiful — to go into your garden or up into the mountain to pick and make a lei for someone is such a simple, but deeply meaningful, act of aloha.”
Kūhaʻo Zane, cultural practitioner and creative director of Sig Zane Designs, agreed.
“Lei making and gathering cultivate a kinship with our environment. Each lei gifted to a special person – or even place – incites reciprocity, or aloha, for our island communities,” Zane, a Hilo native, told T+L.
With the amount of intention poured into every lei made, it makes sense there is a way to dispose of them that is uniquely symbolic — and doesn’t involve a hotel trash can.
“A lei can be kept as long as you want it, but when the flowers have given all they can, you can cut the string and throw it away, and return those flowers to the land as a gesture of respect and honor,” McComber said, noting Hawaii’s commitment to environmental preservation known as malama ‘aina or to take care of the land.
Read the original article on Travel & Leisure.